释义 |
flint I. \ˈflint\ noun (-s) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English, from Old English, flint, rock; akin to Old High German flins pebble, hard stone, Old Norse flettugrjōt slate, Old Swedish flinta splinter of stone, and probably to Old High German spaltan to split — more at spill 1. a. : a massive somewhat impure variety of quartz usually gray to brown or nearly black in color, breaking with a conchoidal fracture and sharp edge, being very hard, and striking fire with steel b. : a concretion or nodule of flint usually embedded in other softer rock < in certain areas the primitive nomads mined flints from the soft chalk > c. : powdered quartz : potter's flint 2. : an implement of flint used by primitive man 3. a. : a piece of flint for striking fire formerly used for kindling fires or igniting material (as in a flintlock gun) b. : a material used for striking fire; especially : an alloy of iron and cerium commonly used in cigarette lighters 4. : something likened to flint in hardness or unyielding quality < the ground was frozen to flint > < her heart became flint, she could only resist and deny > as a. : flint corn b. : flint glass II. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) archaic : to supply (as a gun) with flint III. adjective Usage: usually capitalized Etymology: from Flint, Michigan : of or from the city of Flint, Mich. < a Flint physician > : of the kind or style prevalent in Flint IV. Usage: usually capitalized variant of flintshire |